| Literature DB >> 32733735 |
Yasuhiro Kimura1, Sayo Hamatani2,3, Kazuki Matsumoto3, Eiji Shimizu3,4.
Abstract
Bipolar II disorder is a recurrent mental health disorder characterized by alternating hypomanic and depressive episodes. Providing cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) as an adjuvant to pharmacotherapy can reduce the recurrence rate of bipolar disorder. It has not been examined whether CBT can be started during a depressive episode in patients with bipolar II disorder; however, the use of CBT during the remission period has been demonstrated to reduce recurrence. The current study is a case report involving three Japanese patients with bipolar II disorder, who started CBT during the depressive phase after a hypomanic episode was stabilized by pharmacotherapy. All patients experienced excessively positive thinking one week apart and were able to choose behaviors that would stabilize bipolar mood by observing its precursors. After intervention, patients' bipolar mood according to the Internal State Scale (ISS) and the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) was improved. Our findings suggested that providing CBT to patients with bipolar II disorder during depressive episodes as an adjunct to pharmacotherapy is feasible.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733735 PMCID: PMC7376417 DOI: 10.1155/2020/3892024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Psychiatry ISSN: 2090-6838
Patients' background and characteristic.
| Kim | Meg | Hank | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Female | Female | Male |
| Age | 24 years old | 64 years old | 29 years old |
| Age of onset | 23 years old | 40 years old | 20 years old |
| Marital status | Single | Married | Single |
| Education level | College | Junior college | College |
| Employment status | Nursey teacher | Maturity retirement at a nursery teacher | Programmer |
| Comorbidity | None | None | None |
| Pharmacotherapy | Lithium carbonate 400 mg, blonanserin 1 mg | Lithium carbonate 200 mg | Lamotrigine 200 mg |
Patients' mood episode.
| Hypomanic episode | Depressive episode | |
|---|---|---|
| Kim | 23 years old winter | 24 years old spring |
| Meg | 40 years old winter | 41 years old spring |
| 62 years old spring-autumn | 64 years old spring | |
| Hank | 20 years old spring | 24-25 years old |
| 25-26 years old | 27 years old summer |
Figure 1Patient 2 Meg's case formulation.
Tasks and contents of each patient.
| Module | Patient 1 (Kim) | Patient 2 (Meg) | Patient 3 (Hank) |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Psychoeducation | Patients were provided with the following information: the prevalence of bipolar disorders is about 2% and the prevalence in men and women, which reaches 5% when subthreshold bipolar conditions are included, is about the same [ | ||
| B. Case conceptualization and therapeutic goal setting | When she meets a person, she thinks “Is she going to say something negative?” She reinforces the belief, “I'm worthless.” As a result, she does not leave the house and does not consult anyone. | Meg was depressed about the fact that the inside of the house is scattered, and the nonfunctional belief, “I am lazy and useless,” is activated. Meg drives purpose-oriented activities to regain self-confidence; therefore, she always postpones annoying routines. | Hank's mood is uplifting; he overdoes his work, makes mistakes, and activates the nonfunctional belief, “I am a bad person.” To get away from it though, he was immersed in work. |
| C. Monitoring activation and mood | Hypomanic: decreased sleep time, increased activity, talkativeness, and extravagance. | Hypomanic: decreased sleep time, increased purpose-oriented activities, increased sociability, increased optimistic thinking, and talkativeness. | Hypomanic: reduced sleep time, increased activity, talkativeness, frustration, increased money, increased work, and approaching women. |
| D. Mastering coping behaviors with prodromes | Hypomanic precursors: taking a break, calling a family member, and consulting a physician. | Hypomanic precursors: doing daily routines such as housekeeping and cleaning and performing unscheduled actions (delayed) in the 24-hour transition. | Hypomanic precursor: when shopping, do not buy immediately. Wait for a week, before deciding to buy things added to an online shopping basket. |
| E. Establishing sleep and daily routine | Schedule activities during the day, wake up on time, and consume meals regularly. | Meg's daytime activity has improved her sleep quality at night. She refrained from taking a nap and excessive caffeine. | Hank decides to go to work on weekdays, even if he does not feel good. Overtime is restricted to 19:00, even if there is work left. Hank managed bathing, muscle training, and game time. |
| F. Rescripting dysfunctional beliefs | Kim identified the beliefs “I am worthless” and “Everything will fail” and rewrote it as “The future is unpredictable, let us act first.” | Meg identified the belief “I am useless and worthless” and rewrote it as “I am loved by friends and family.” | Hank identified the belief “I am a bad person and I will lonely for life” and rewrote it as “I am single now; I do not know what will happen in the future. I have brothers and friends.” |
Figure 2Change of subscales in ISS scores.